xxii Annual Report, (February, 1908. 
side) has up to now been known. This is the Atmatattvaviveka 
or Bauddhadhikkara, by Udayana, written about 984 A.D. Five 
works on the Buddhist side have now |_been pues viz, 1. 
as of Kansuj holonbing to the Rathora or Gaharwar 
family were comico Hindus. Among them Govinda Chandra 
was specially famous for his orthodoxy. It was at his court that 
Lakshmidhara made the first great compilation of Smriti yet 
known.. Govinda Chandra, however, had a Buddhist wife, and 
she presented a copy of Astaséhasrika, Histo is to be found in 
the Durbar Library, to a Buddhist Vihar: 
Bodhicharyavatara is a work oreittion Santideva in the 
7th century A.D. It isa oyepeeeey work of the highest import- 
ance to Buddhist. Inthe Durbar Library, however, there is a 
work entitled Bodhicharyavataramimamsa, It is Bodhicharya- 
vatara itself, with a few verses added both in the beginning and at 
the end. The object of the added verses is to show that it is an 
interlocution between Asoka and Upa Gupta. This is the way in 
which History has been perverted by ignorant monks of later 
Works on Dhanurveda are very rare. Hence the discovery 
of Kodanda Sastra attributed to Dilipa may be considered an 
important one. It treats of how a bow is to be made, how arrows 
are to be aimed, ete. Greater reliance, however, is placed on 
mantras and incantations than on actual skill in archery 
manuscript of the Yogasataka ( ) is atoahotea to 
Nagarjuna. The commentator, Dhruvapada, says that the anthor: 
in one sloka hints that he is also the author of the Uttara Yantra 
of the Sushruta Samhita, 
Ina MS. of the work entitled ysrqrefafaqa are to be 
found short works by Nagarjuna, Arya adeva, Dingnaga, Padma-. 
vajra. and Anangavajra. Nayarjuna’s work is entitled @yaraae. 
Aryadeva’s work is entitled wtfwsras¥e. This MS. also has 
been copied and brought down to Calcutta. 
Search for Arabic and Persian MSS. 
In February 1907 Lieutenant-Colonel Phillott took over 
charge from Dr. E, Denison Ross, ring the year under review, 
some valuable additions have been made to the collection. Special 
attention was paid to gathering information about various 
rivate libraries, and for this reason the travelling Maulavis had to 
travel more than previously. Libraries unknown before were 
discovered in Ahmadabad, Bombay, Hyderabad, and Madras, 
places hitherto unvisited by the Maulavis. 
